Arts & Events

Arts Calendar

Tuesday October 24, 2006

TUESDAY, OCT. 24 -more-


The Theater: Antenna Theater Brings Audience Back to ‘High School’

By Ken Bullock, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 24, 2006

It’s not exactly High School Confidential, the interactive show Sausalito’s Antenna Theater is staging at Berkeley High through this weekend, but as an example of Antenna’s ‘Walkmanology,’ more of a tour through four years on campus compressed into 45 minutes, literally a walk-through of secondary education. -more-


Harvest of Song Features Local Composers, Poets

By Jaime Robles, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 24, 2006

I am waiting for a rehearsal, held in the living room of a beautiful home, to begin. It’s the first time I will hear the pianist and soprano who are performing an aria that I wrote the libretto for. Earlier I saw the composer, Peter Josheff, going over the music with the pianist. He was totally focused. What he was telling her matters. -more-


SF Jazz Festival Underway

By Ira Steingroot, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 24, 2006

At the Friday night opening concert of the 24th annual SF Jazz Festival, Sonny Rollins performed a half dozen tunes for almost two hours with an astounding amount of passion, strength and nobility. -more-


Berkeley’s Barn Owls: The View From 1926

By Joe Eaton, Special to the Planet
Tuesday October 24, 2006

Berkeley was a much different place 80 years ago. But then as now, it was prime barn owl territory. During the summer of 1926, E. Raymond Hall of UC’s Museum of Vertebrate Zoology kept track of a family of owls nesting in the tower of the First Presbyterian Church that then stood at Dana and Channing. Hall, who habitually worked late, heard them calling while walking home from the museum between 10 p.m. and midnight. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Tuesday October 24, 2006

TUESDAY, OCT. 24 -more-


Arts Calendar

Friday October 20, 2006

FRIDAY, OCT. 20 -more-


Theater: Central Works Brings ‘Andromache’ to City Club

By KEN BULLOCK
Friday October 20, 2006

A veiled woman enters a long chamber by the near door, kneels in a patch of light, tosses back her veil and mutters some kind of devotional, eyes heavenward. Another veiled woman hurries in and spirits the first away through the far door. A robed man enters, goes to the far door, but falls to the floor in tears, crying out “Andromache!” A sword-bearing man enters, whispers to the prostrate man, and they leave. A young man in a tattered robe enters. -more-


MOVING PICTURES: ‘The Motel’ Strives for Indie Credibility

By JUSTIN DeFREITAS
Friday October 20, 2006

So-called “indie” cinema is supposed to break away from the tired formulas of Hollywood filmmaking. Yet indie films themselves have lapsed into their own formulas, generating just as many clichés as the Hollywood blockbusters at which they so haughtily sneer. Unfortunately, Michael Kang’s The Motel embraces far too many of them. -more-


Film: All We Are Saying is Give Grass a Chance

By Roger Rapoport
Friday October 20, 2006

One film that did not make it on the fall film festival circuit this year is The Life and Times of John Sinclair. A documentary with plenty of smoke that mirrors the protest movement, it’s the story of the man who jump started John Lennon’s political career, John Sinclair. -more-


Rollins Kicks Off SF Jazz Festival

Friday October 20, 2006

Editor’s note: The preview for the 24th Annual San Francisco Jazz Festival which ran in the Oct. 17 issue of the Berkeley Daily Planet gave the wrong lineup. It repeated the list of last year’s festival performers. Below is the corrected information about the kick-off of this year’s festival. The preview of the rest of the festival will run next week. -more-


A Homecoming For Alaine Rodin

By Ken Bullock
Friday October 20, 2006

Soprano Alaine Rodin, Berkeley native, a graduate of the San Francisco Conservatory and the Juilliard School, has made an international career for herself as an opera singer. -more-


About The House: The Dangers of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

By MATT CANTOR
Friday October 20, 2006

Killing yourself isn’t as easy as it used to be. You used to be able to get in your 8,000 pound Buick, pull into the garage, tune in KNBR and slowly pass into unconsciousness to the strains of “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes,” as the disappointments of the world faded softly into nothingness. Wow, that was dark. But it’s a reality that carbon monoxide has been widely used to end it all for many decades, maybe a hundred years. -more-


Quake Tip of the Week

By LARRY GUILLOT
Friday October 20, 2006

How’s Your Earthquake Knowledge ? (Part 2) -more-


Garden Variety: Take the Thyme for a Jaunt To Morningsun Herb Farm

By RON SULLIVAN
Friday October 20, 2006

Here’s another field trip, in case you’re not busy enough with all the October nursery sales and native-plant fests. Morningsun Herb Farm has a few natives, but its focus is garden herbs in the vernacular sense of the word: useful culinary, medicinal, and fragrant plants. -more-


Oakland Housing Authority Wins Award for Mixed-Use Project

Bay City News
Friday October 20, 2006

The National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials announced this week that the Oakland Housing Agency has won a national award for its Mandela Gateway Mixed-Use Housing Development. -more-


Berkeley This Week

Friday October 20, 2006

FRIDAY, OCT. 20 -more-